Submitted by Foxs-In-A-Trenchcoat t3_zgk9bh in askscience
If a person was chronically undernourished throughout childhood, but became food secure at age 18, are there markers in their bones that would show up on x-ray that shows the history of malnourishment? How long would the markers be visible?
HermitAndHound t1_izigfui wrote
Teeth say more about that than bones. Bone matter gets swapped out constantly and will show more signals about what the recent diet was than historic (unless it was bad enough to cause permanent bone deformations)
Enamel hypoplasia is commonly used as an indicator of "stress" during development in archeology and anthropology. It's not perfect by far, but when several children have the same sequence of defects as their teeth developed it's more of a sign of general illness or malnutrition than a single physical trauma to that tooth.